Overrated schools

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:

Nah you're trolling. No one is this stupid.

"THE DATA IS IRRELEVANT! AND I DON'T NEED DATA TO SUPPORT MY CLAIM! WHAT I SAY GOES". Lol you dopey bastard.

The data for your specific school and county is irrelevant, idiot. If you don't understand how 1 datapoint - your school/county - is irrelevant to the whole country, you shouldn't even be thinking about engineering let alone arguing about Caltech/Ivy engineering.


Not my school. Not my datapoints.

ANY SCHOOL. ANY DATAPOINT.

Lol, keep digging.

You don't have access to scattergrams for the whole country, idiot.


1. Actually many naviance schools allow guest logins and I have used them.
2. What I personally have access to is irrelevant anyway.
3. One data point - whether my school or any other - disproves your claim.

Now, who is the idiot exactly?

How many guest logins do you have to get a good idea of the entire country's scatterplots?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Nah you're trolling. No one is this stupid.

"THE DATA IS IRRELEVANT! AND I DON'T NEED DATA TO SUPPORT MY CLAIM! WHAT I SAY GOES". Lol you dopey bastard.

The data for your specific school and county is irrelevant, idiot. If you don't understand how 1 datapoint - your school/county - is irrelevant to the whole country, you shouldn't even be thinking about engineering let alone arguing about Caltech/Ivy engineering.


Not my school. Not my datapoints.

ANY SCHOOL. ANY DATAPOINT.

Lol, keep digging.

You don't have access to scattergrams for the whole country, idiot.


1. Actually many naviance schools allow guest logins and I have used them.
2. What I personally have access to is irrelevant anyway.
3. One data point - whether my school or any other - disproves your claim.

Now, who is the idiot exactly?

How many guest logins do you have to get a good idea of the entire country's scatterplots?


To disprove you claim that any student accepted at Caltech would be auto-admit at Harvard and Yale? Exactly one with one student who had applied to H/Y and was accepted to Caltech.

But I have many, and you can too with a little research. And there was a reddit post of the evidence shown above also, which you did not address. You also didn't address the racial aspect of your stupid claim, which you continue to assert be disproved without showing evidence yourself.

You are clearly a troll or an idiot, and I will not bother with either any longer. This argument is settled and won. You are wrong.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


The view is much nicer where you have the goalposts now. By the end of this discussion you'll be saying "Any student accepted to Caltech who is also accepted to Harvard will be admitted to Harvard". Lol.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


The view is much nicer where you have the goalposts now. By the end of this discussion you'll be saying "Any student accepted to Caltech who is also accepted to Harvard will be admitted to Harvard". Lol.


Love Dumpy’s nonsense. This is what happens when people are forced to stay home. But staying home beats looting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


The view is much nicer where you have the goalposts now. By the end of this discussion you'll be saying "Any student accepted to Caltech who is also accepted to Harvard will be admitted to Harvard". Lol.

More like posters here seriously lack reading comprehension considering I have stated the same thing multiple times at this point.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.



+1000

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


The view is much nicer where you have the goalposts now. By the end of this discussion you'll be saying "Any student accepted to Caltech who is also accepted to Harvard will be admitted to Harvard". Lol.

More like posters here seriously lack reading comprehension considering I have stated the same thing multiple times at this point.


Yah sorry man, your post at 06/06/2020 14:37 Said nothing about ifs or merit.
Any student that gets into Caltech would easily get into Harvard/Yale engineering. To argue otherwise is idiotic.


That’s you, goalposts-mover! You’re full of it! And we laugh at you!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


This is what happens when you stay home too long bc of the pandemic. Those virus 🦠 starts eating your brain so your brain becomes non-functional.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
It is probably hyperbole....particularly since Caltech is only going to look for STEM excellence, whereas Harvard and Yale are more holistic. But, the typical Caltech student will have a better academic resume than the typical engineering student at those schools.


Academic resume under holistic evaluation is much broadly defined. I know at some ivy sceas, students go in with no intention of working in the engineering field. They branch out to business, finance, law, arts, music, or whatever. Their passion is not in engineering. They may never have tinkered with traditional engineering stuff in their life. They tinker with ideas of how to use engineering concepts in fields in which a Sheldon Cooper never imagined. A Sheldon Cooper who never kissed a girl in his life doesn’t have what it takes to get into an ivy. He just doesn’t doesn’t have “it,” whatever that is.


Caltech admissions, by all accounts, is holistic in that they care about extracurriculars, particular engineering-focused extracurriculars.

Ivy holistic admissions, on the other hand, means legacy, politically-influential admissions, donor admissions, along with some sprinkling of leadership-focused extracurriculars.

However, something that people don't seem to understand, again, is that to get into Caltech you need scores + engineering-heavy extracurriculars.
Such students would easily get into any Ivy engineering based solely on their scores and engineering extracurriculars.



Let’s try this way Dopey.

If CalTech rejects someone who goes on to win a Nobel, CalTech will be soul searching, possibly discussing defunding the school. If HYPS did the same, they’ll be bragging they reject even Nobel winners. It’s a different process. Some schools are more about who they admit. Ivys are less about who they admit and more about who they keep out.

First of all, you are clearly an idiot and your low intelligence shows.
Second of all, you seem to pathetically worship the Ivies as if they are some holy grail of academia. They are not. You sucking up to Ivy admissions is not going to get your low intelligence brethren in, so stop the sycophantry.

Then tell us wise Dopey, why isn’t Harvard 40%+ Asian like some of these tech schools? Surely you must know.

Idiot, Harvard quite clearly racially discriminates against Asians.


DP - I do not see the PP "worshipping" ivy admissions in any way, just disputing your baseless, unevidenced claim.

For argument let's assume that H does discriminate against Asians. Doesn't that completely invalidate your point?

This is a level of reading incomprehension never seen before.

Again and again, I have stated that any student that gets into Caltech would get into Harvard/Yale engineering based on scores and ECs

Race is not a test score nor is it an EC. An engineering student admitted to Caltech - which is entirely on academic merit - may be rejected by Harvard because he doesn't check the right boxes for legacy status, donations by parents, gender, race, etc.

That does not mean that the student was rejected based on scores or ECs.

AKA if Harvard's admissions was based on merit over fluff and nepotism, any student accepted to Caltech engineering would easily get into Harvard engineering.

Does writing it all out help you understand?


Keep on posting, Dumpy. We rather see brain deads here than out in the streets rioting and looting!
Anonymous
Amherst might be considered overrated.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Amherst might be considered overrated.



A lot of people consider SLACs to be overrated (I don’t).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Amherst might be considered overrated.
By an imbecile perhaps.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

Keep on posting, Dumpy. We rather see brain deads here than out in the streets rioting and looting!

Who let this imbecile onto a computer?
Anonymous
Everything outside of Ivies, MIT, Stanford and maybe (maybe) Duke. So everything outside of top 10 to 12 is overrated by crazies

Look, nobody cares if your kid went to Northwestern or UVA or Wake Forest or SMU (#64) or whether your kid's state school is top 50 or top 80. All of the top 100 are schools are solid, however, you sound like an insecure striver lunatic knowing and bragging about where they rank and acting like their rank means anything to anyone.

Because honestly every college outside of the top 10 to 12 has a large % of unimpressive kids who will go on to live super normal ho-hum middle class lives.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Everything outside of Ivies, MIT, Stanford and maybe (maybe) Duke. So everything outside of top 10 to 12 is overrated by crazies

Look, nobody cares if your kid went to Northwestern or UVA or Wake Forest or SMU (#64) or whether your kid's state school is top 50 or top 80. All of the top 100 are schools are solid, however, you sound like an insecure striver lunatic knowing and bragging about where they rank and acting like their rank means anything to anyone.

Because honestly every college outside of the top 10 to 12 has a large % of unimpressive kids who will go on to live super normal ho-hum middle class lives.


Yikes...who sounds like the striver here?
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